Hormone regulation of murine T cells: potent tissue-specific immunosuppressive effects of thyroxine targeted to gut T cells
Open Access
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in International Immunology
- Vol. 8 (2) , 231-235
- https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/8.2.231
Abstract
Recent studies in athymic mice indicate that the neuroendocrine hormones thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) can significantly influence the development of lymphoid cells associated with intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL). In the present study we have examined the effects of those hormones, as well as of thyroxine (T4), a thyroid-derived hormone regulated by TSH, on IEL development in euthymic mice. As reported here, whereas IEL in euthymic mice were unaffected by TRH and TSH treatment, T4 administered to adult euthymic mice at 3 or 6 weeks of age caused a dramatic reduction in the numbers of TCRαβ, CD8αβ IEL, i.e. the samesubsets previously shown to be up-regulated by TRH and TSH in athymic mice. When given to euthymic mice >8 weeks of age, after TCRαβ and CD8αβ subsets had reached normal levels, T4 had minimal effect on IEL, suggesting that the mode of action of T4 is directed to developing but not mature IEL. That possibility was confirmed in experiments in which T4 treatment of bone marrow radiation chimeras during an active phase of T cell regeneration temporarily halted all IEL development at a stage characteristic of immature IEL. Most interesting, the immunosuppressive effects of T4 were selectively targeted to the intestinal immune system since T4 had no effect on developing thymocytes or on mature peripheral T cells, in either normal euthymic mice or during hematopoietic reconstitution of radiation chimeras. These findings have implications for understanding intestinal immunity and disease, including chronic intestinal inflammation, in ways not previously appreciated.Keywords
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